KK wrote:It doesn't help that so many people in her cabinet and party are intentionally undermining her at every given opportunity. She's in an impossible situation and I have some sympathy. I don't know what she's supposed to do when there are two factions within the Tories pulling in two completely different directions.

She should publicly humiliate Boris. That would send a message pretty quickly. But she won't because she's scared and useless.

Rex Kramer wrote:May is without doubt the worst prime minister this country has had.

No, that was Cameron, May was given the unenviable task of being left to clean up his mess.

Cameron was a fool but wasn’t this useless. May is just calamity after calamity. I didn’t think much of his abilities but I never thought him as incompetent as May appears to be.

She had a hard job after Cameron’s stupid referendum, but she shows no leadership at all.

I wouldn’t say she’s the worst ever (she’s not finished yet) but she’s comfortably the worst in my lifetime.

Cameron and Osbourne were shitheels of the highest order but they had a philosophy and enacted it. It was an awful, awful philosophy, and Cameron deserves to go down in history as the real architect of our post-Brexit nation, but they were competent politicians, mostly.

May is a second stringer who was probably stretching her abilities as a minister. As PM she's utterly out of her depth. As far as I can see, we may as well not have a PM at the moment. The Tory party has devolved into a number of warring cabals, no decisions are being taken on anything substantial for fear any actual stance would topple the leadership and she simply isn't enough of a leader to stop her ministers openly fighting.

I can't comment on ever, I don't have that sort of political history in me, but as moggy says she's the worst in our lifetimes and probably the worst since WWII.

Paul Dacre has said any change to the Daily Mail’s support for Brexit after his departure as editor later this year would be “editorial and commercial suicide”.

In his first public words since he announced last week that he will step down from his role after 26 years, Dacre said he had heard from “countless” readers worried about whether the Daily Mail will continue to support EU withdrawal.

Questions had been raised over whether the newspaper’s stance on Brexit would change once Remain-supporting Mail on Sunday editor Geordie Greig takes charge in the autumn.

Writing for the Spectator’s Diary feature this week, Dacre said: “My answer to them – and others – is unequivocal.

“Support for Brexit is in the DNA of both the Daily Mail and, more pertinently, its readers. Any move to reverse this would be editorial and commercial suicide.”

Dacre revealed that he received “many lovely letters from public figures” in the past week, the warmest coming from former Prime Minister Gordon Brown and Labour peer Lord Blunkett.

He also said: “I thank my stars for a career that’s been enthralling, privileged and profoundly fulfilling.”

Guardian columnist Polly Toynbee last week described Dacre as “poisoner of the national psyche, bully-in-chief, whose iron whim has terrified prime ministers for a quarter of a century”.

In response, former Observer editor Roger Alton wrote to the Guardian to defend Dacre, calling him a “very great man and a newspaperman of genius”.

Dacre also responded to Mail on Sunday columnist Rachel Johnson’s appearance on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme “rejoicing that the future Mail will be less inflammatory and more inclusive”.

He wrote: “If calling five racist London thugs ‘Murderers’ on the front page or carrying a picture of a swimming sea turtle swallowing a plastic supermarket bag is inflammatory, I plead guilty.”

He also listed a number of other Mail campaigns that have “given voice to the voiceless” including justice for the Omagh bomb victims, the release of Shaker Aamer from Guantanamo and sanctuary for the army’s Afghan interpreters.

“As for the other ‘i’ word, one of the main reasons Britain voted Brexit was the refusal by our ruling class, led by the BBC, to allow a mature debate on mass immigration which has nothing to do with race and everything to do with numbers,” Dacre added.

“If the Mail promoted that debate and helped prevent the rise here of the kind of ugly right-wing political movements now festering across the EU, then I suffer my critics’ obloquy with pride.”

Dacre will become chairman and editor-in-chief of Associated Newspapers, publisher of the Daily Mail, Mail on Sunday and Metro newspapers and Mail Online website, from 1 October this year.

“As for the other ‘i’ word, one of the main reasons Britain voted Brexit was the refusal by our ruling class, led by the BBC, to allow a mature debate on mass immigration which has nothing to do with race and everything to do with numbers,” Dacre added.

“If the Mail promoted that debate and helped prevent the rise here of the kind of ugly right-wing political movements now festering across the EU, then I suffer my critics’ obloquy with pride.”

Surely he is part of the ugly right-wing political movements now festering across the EU.

Rex Kramer wrote:May is without doubt the worst prime minister this country has had.

No, that was Cameron, May was given the unenviable task of being left to clean up his mess.

Cameron was a fool but wasn’t this useless. May is just calamity after calamity. I didn’t think much of his abilities but I never thought him as incompetent as May appears to be.

She had a hard job after Cameron’s stupid referendum, but she shows no leadership at all.

I wouldn’t say she’s the worst ever (she’s not finished yet) but she’s comfortably the worst in my lifetime.

Cameron and Osbourne were shitheels of the highest order but they had a philosophy and enacted it. It was an awful, awful philosophy, and Cameron deserves to go down in history as the real architect of our post-Brexit nation, but they were competent politicians, mostly.

May is a second stringer who was probably stretching her abilities as a minister. As PM she's utterly out of her depth. As far as I can see, we may as well not have a PM at the moment. The Tory party has devolved into a number of warring cabals, no decisions are being taken on anything substantial for fear any actual stance would topple the leadership and she simply isn't enough of a leader to stop her ministers openly fighting.

I can't comment on ever, I don't have that sort of political history in me, but as moggy says she's the worst in our lifetimes and probably the worst since WWII.

Yep. I guess Anthony Eden might come close, but I don’t know much about him other than the disaster of Suez, he might have been average other than that debacle.

“As for the other ‘i’ word, one of the main reasons Britain voted Brexit was the refusal by our ruling class, led by the BBC, to allow a mature debate on mass immigration which has nothing to do with race and everything to do with numbers,” Dacre added.

“If the Mail promoted that debate and helped prevent the rise here of the kind of ugly right-wing political movements now festering across the EU, then I suffer my critics’ obloquy with pride.”

Surely he is part of the ugly right-wing political movements now festering across the EU.